Our Manifesto

Monday, 28 April 2014

Campaigners of all ages at the South Kilburn Estate Photo: Sujata Aurora

Last Saturday afternoon I joined other members of Brent Housing Action on a ‘Housing Inequality Bus Tour’ highlighting the harsh human consequences of London’s deepening housing crisis. A double-decker bus hired by the union UNITE set off from Bishops’ Avenue near Highgate (also known as ‘billionaire’s row’) and made stops at key sites where regeneration schemes are contributing to housing injustice, including the Jubilee Sports centre near Queen’s Park and the South Kilburn Estate in Brent.

The nature and dynamics of this housing crisis are of course complicated, involving the drastic decline in the supply of social housing and its replacement by private rented accommodation during the Thatcher years; New Labour’s promotion of London as a property honey pot for the global super-rich; and now the ConDem government’s use of welfare reform to socially cleanse large chunks of the capital - including Brent, as a recent BBC Panorama programme illustrated.

The community mobilises to save the Jubilee Sports Centre Photo: Pilgrim Tucker

The really insidious aspect of this process, however, is that, whilst the drivers of the housing crisis may be global, their implementation is very local. Not a week goes by in our city without another neighbourhood asset and community space being picked out for lucrative ‘redevelopment’ – almost universally with the assistance and complicity of local authorities. In Willesden Green, the Library re-development is the most blatant example of putting profits before people. In neighbouring wards, the ongoing saga over the former Kensal Rise Library and the recent cross-Borough decision to demolish the Moberly and Jubilee Sports centres in order to build 155 housing units, only 12 of which will be ‘affordable’ represent further instances. Even the much-trumpeted South Kilburn ‘regeneration’ is in fact‘decanting’ many existing residents out-of-Borough to make way for one-bedroom flats with price-tags starting at £284, 950. Anyone chasing an ‘affordable’ home should expect to cough up 80% of that market price.

The Willesden Library Gated Development for Sale in Singapore

Local campaigning groups like Brent Housing Action have sprung up across London and the rest of the country in an effort underline the connections between Council-led ‘redevelopment’ and social cleansing, and to join-up the dots between seemingly parochial regeneration schemes which are rapidly changing the social mix of the whole of London.One of Make Willesden Green’s slogans is that our campaign is local but not parochial. That’s why our focus on the scandalous Willesden Green Library centre re-development is not simply about unwanted changes in our own backyard – it is also fundamentally about promoting a different housing model that allows Local Authorities to build more social housing, apply rent controls to the private sector and reverse the promotion of ‘buy-to-leave’ properties.

This Thursday 24 April, the PopUp University
will be hosting an evening of debate and discussion from 6-8pm on the Grunwick Strike of 1976-78.
Together with the 1984-85 miners’ strike, the Grunwick dispute is one of the
signal moments in the postwar labour history of this country - and it all
unfolded in the back streets of Willesden Green. For a brief but intense
period, striking workers in our neighbourhood, led by the emblematic Mrs Jayaben Desai, put collective struggles against racism, patriarchy and
workplace exploitation at the centre of national politics.

These struggles are far from over. Although
the Grunwick processing plant has long disappeared, episodes like last summer’s
Home Office xenophobic van campaign or the Willesden letting agent who was shown to openly discriminate against African-Caribbean would-be tenants remind us of the everyday racism still plaguing our streets. Similarly, our local Homebase cuts costs by using unpaid staff under the ConDem government’s
workfare programme, while local Labour politicians rail against striking teachers fighting the
privatisaton of our schools.

Thursday’s event therefore aims to be as much
a commemoration of the Grunwick strike, as an opportunity to consider its legacies
for today’s campaigns for social justice and equality in our neighbourhood and
beyond.After screening the documentary
“The Great Grunwick Strike”,
we’ll be joined for discussion by Pete Firmin from Brent Trades Union Council and Dr Sundari Anitha and Professor
Ruth Pearson who coordinated a research project on“Striking Women: South Asian workers’ struggles in the UK labour
market from Grunwick to Gate Gourmet”.
The event is completely free, but online registration is required HERE.

Saturday, 12 April 2014

Over
the past few weeks Willesden Green has felt like the last frontier
town in the Wild West. With bulldozers at work on Electric House, the
month-long road closure and bus-diversion in and around the Library
centre redevelopment, and further construction next to the Buddhist
Temple on Willesden Lane, it’s almost like residents have to ask
permission from contractors to move around our own neighbourhood, not
the other way round.

The most recent and potentially worrying new development is at the former Willesden Green Police Station, where talk of sheriffs
and cowboys is sadly not entirely fictional. Neighbours on Huddlestone
Road have been alarmed by irregularities in the development of that
site – including dangerous manoeuvring of HGV vehicles in a narrow
residential street, stacking of building materials on third party
walls, burning of materials on the site as well as noisy work conducted
on weekends and early mornings. Constant monitoring by residents, and
persistent complaints to the Council have brought
some enforcement action, but there still remains real concern and some
confusion about what will replace the former Police Station. The
residents were first advised that the Police Station would be converted
into a nursery. Within weeks a building control application was
submitted to reconfigure the Police Station into a hostel. A few days
ago this application was revised to a four storey building with
commercial units and twenty-four residential units and
there is no accompanying planning application. Residents can only
speculate that the much loved Victorian Police Station will at some
stage be demolished and replaced with flats and commercial units, but
even this is guess-work given the lack of communication from either
developers or the Council about what is going on in that address.

Narrow manoeuvers

Neighbours
from Huddlestone Road made it very clear at the recent Brent Connects
meeting that all they are asking is for the redevelopment of the former
Police Station to happen lawfully and with due respect for local
residents and Council regulations – they are not objecting to the
refurbishment as such, but to the way it is conducted and the lack of
information about the future of that site. It
has been brought to their attention that the works are being carried
out by a contractor who has a history of unauthorised building work in
Willesden Green, and who has in the past been heavily fined by the
Health and Safety Executive. They have also been advised that the contractor is using a private building controls firm, rather than the Council and this is an additional source of anxiety for all of us living in the area.

Busy, but Early and Noisy too

All
this unfortunately does little to dispel the sense that our Borough,
and Willesden Green in particular is a soft target for unscrupulous
developers. With the Council encouraging unfettered redevelopment of
our neighbourhoods (and at least one ongoing investigation into
fraudulent support for the library conversion in Kensal Rise) it
seems easy for rogue contractors to give the already understaffed
inspection and enforcement teams the run-around. In the meantime, it is
residents that are acting as full-time, unofficial inspectors of
building sites. It’s hard work, living in the wild frontier.